Exclusive: China's ZTE to slash about 3,000 jobs - sources

HONG KONG (Reuters) - (This January 6 story has been refiled to correct shipments fall in paragraph 11 to 11.8 percent, not 36.5 percent.)

The company name of ZTE is seen outside the ZTE R&D building in Shenzhen, China April 27, 2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo

Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE (000063.SZ), which is facing U.S. trade sanctions that could severely disrupt its supply chain, is slashing about 3,000 jobs, including a fifth of positions in its struggling handset business in China, company sources said.

The sources said the Shenzhen-based company, one of the world’s biggest telecoms gear makers, is axing about 5 percent of its 60,000 global workforce.

Its global handset operations will shed 600 jobs, or 10 percent of the total, with the cuts concentrated in China, where it has been losing market share.

“Cuts in the handset business in China will be beyond 20 percent,” said a senior executive who has been briefed on the lay-offs, which are scheduled to be completed within the first quarter.

A local manager in one of the company’s overseas branches said a 10 percent quota was given to shed staff in his department by the end of January.

“I was also given names that must go because they had tried to apply for jobs at (rival) Huawei [HWT.UL] and are therefore branded as ‘unstable factors’,” said the manager, who is not in the handset unit and asked not to be identified.

The company declined to comment.

ZTE is the only Chinese smartphone vendor with a meaningful presence in the United States, where its 10 percent market share makes it the fourth-largest vendor.

The U.S. Commerce Department first announced in March that it would impose a ban on exports by U.S. companies to ZTE for allegedly breaking Washington’s sanctions on sales to Iran.

The ban has not yet come into effect following a series of reprieves, the last of which expires on Feb. 27, but if it does go ahead, the company’s supply chain could be severely handicapped. It relies on U.S. companies including Qualcomm (QCOM.O), Microsoft (MSFT.O) and Intel (INTC.O) for about a third of its components.

The uncertainty hanging over the company weighed heavily on its business last year, with its worldwide smartphone shipments falling 11.8 percent compared with 2015, according to industry database IDC.

ZTE chairman Zhao Xianming said in his New Year speech to staff that the company, which has annual sales of more than $15 billion, had “encountered its biggest crisis in its 31 year history”, according to a transcript on the company’s official WeChat account.

He vowed to enhance internal auditing and said the company was streamlining its management structure.